Millions obsessed over the true crime explored in Netflix’s 2015 “Making a Murderer” series. Mankato writer Megan Cooley Peterson got a worldview shift and a book out of it.
“I remember watching and being super-invested in: Did Steven Avery kill this young woman?” recalls Peterson, whose second mystery for young adults, following “The Liar’s Daughter,” is “Dead Girls Talking.” “But then, the more I thought about it, I thought about the victim and the fact that her family’s worst nightmare was now a hit show. Her story was being used as entertainment and here I was, in my living room, feeding into that.”
Peterson, 43, had long been a fan of true crime, but that interest chilled in the aftermath of “Murderer.” Reflecting on what it might be like to be the family of a victim whose story became a sensation led directly to “Dead Girls Talking,” in which high school student Bettina’s father was convicted of murdering her mother. Her aunt’s podcast about the crime — her aunt believes Bettina’s dad is innocent — has led to a possible copycat killer, as well as unwanted celebrity for the teenager.
“Of course, the victims and their families don’t want to be involved in these things. But they don’t get a say,” said Peterson, who set “Dead Girls Talking” in North Carolina because she liked the idea of exploring the darkness of a sunny, seemingly friendly place.
We spoke to her by phone from her home in friendly Mankato about the twists and turns her book, which is in stores June 18, took.
Q: Were there any big surprises as you wrote “Dead Girls Talking”?
A: The murderer!
Q: You didn’t know from the beginning whodunit?